Homicide
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Homicide |
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| Murder |
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Assassination · Child murder · Consensual homicide · Contract killing · Honour killing · Lust murder · Lynching · Mass murder · Murder-suicide · Proxy murder · Ritual murder · Serial killer · Spree killer · Torture murder |
| Manslaughter |
| Non-criminal homicide |
| Other types of homicide |
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Avunculicide · Democide · Familicide · Filicide · Fratricide · Gendercide · Genocide · Infanticide · Mariticide · Matricide · Neonaticide · Parricide · Patricide · Regicide · Sororicide · Suicide · Tyrannicide · Uxoricide |
| "Homicide" status disputed |
Homicide (Latin homicidium, homo human being + caedere to cut, kill) refers to the act of killing another human being.[1] It can also describe a person who has committed such an act, though this use is rare in modern English. Homicide is not always an illegal act.
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Criminal homicide is a malum in se crime, and every legal system contains some form of prohibition or regulation of criminal homicide.
Homicidal crimes in some criminal jurisdictions include:
- Murder/murder in English law
- Manslaughter/manslaughter in English law
- Criminal Homicide
- Culpable homicide (in Scots law)
- Negligent homicide
- Criminally negligent homicide
Many forms of homicide have their own term based on the person being killed.
- Infanticide - Killing of an infant
- Fratricide - Killing of one's brother; in a military context, killing of a friendly combatant
- Sororicide - Killing of one's sister
- Parricide - Killing of one's parents
- Patricide - Killing of one's father
- Matricide - Killing of one's mother
- Mariticide - Killing of one's spouse
- Uxoricide - Killing of one's wife
- Filicide - Killing of one's child
- Regicide - Killing of a monarch.
- Genocide - Killing of a national, ethnic, racial or religious group
Homicides do not always involve a crime. Sometimes the law allows homicide by allowing certain defenses to criminal charges. One of the most recognized is self defense, which provides that a person is entitled to commit homicide to protect his or her own life from a deadly attack.
Some defenses include:
Homicides may also be non-criminal when conducted with the sanction of the state. The most obvious example is capital punishment, in which the state determines that a person should die. Homicides committed during war are usually not subject to criminal prosecution either.
- Suicide - Killing of oneself
- Murder book - A homicide case file